Thank God for that. I thought in the UK we paid extortionate prices for our beer.
£2.70 is probably about the average price for a pint.
Last week I went into a bar in Solihull (a very affluent (sp)) part of the Uk and was tried to be charged £3.50 for a pint of Carling (youre equivalent to Bud). I walked 50 yards down the road and got exactly the same pint for £1.80.

In a nice bar 4-5 dollars a pint draft..6 for imported .. In a crappy bar here you can get bud or miller for 2-3 bucks a pint.. Back a few years ago there was domestic and imported pricing, but now they are charging imported prices for all popular beers like magic hat, SN etc..

$3.75-$4.5 in the Northwest. Bigger and better is surely more. We are definatley seeing bars, etc feeling more comfortable charging prices reflecting the cost of a particular beer. It used to be all (good) beers were the same price, now an IIPA will be more than a Red Hook ESB.

It can vary depending on where you live due to things like taxes and just generally higher prices all around.

In Philadelphia, you can get a local craft beer for $3 a pint at certain bars. Other craft beers cost between $4 and $8 a pint depending exactly on what you order, it also might not be a pint - it might be an 8 or 10oz goblet depending on the type beer particularly for higher alcohol beers. Cheap domestic beers can be $2-$3 a pint.

Of course there are always college towns and dive bars where a can of PBR or Stag will run you $1 and a tray with 20 draws will cost $5.

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'Kilgore Trout once wrote a short story which was a dialogue between two pieces of yeast. They were discussing the possible purposes of life as they ate sugar and suffocated in their own excrement. Because of their limited intelligence, they never came close to guessing that they were making champagne.'